Ford Motor Company and Techstars Mobility, driven by Detroit announced newest class of startup businesses that will work this summer from Ford Field offices in downtown Detroit to develop future mobility solutions.

Winners will be part of a three-month program focusing on transportation solutions, aligned with Ford Smart Mobility, the company’s plan to be a leader in connectivity, mobility, autonomous vehicles, the customer experience, and data and analytics.

Each company will receive $120,000 in funding along with three months of intensive guidance on business development, customer acquisition and developing relationships within the auto industry, along with support from top business leaders.

The incoming class will focus on innovations that leverage emerging trends – connectivity, real-time data, on-demand services, and sharing and social platforms – in four key areas of interest to Ford:

HAAS Alert is a connected notification platform that warns motorists when emergency vehicles are approaching

HERO is an app that rewards safe behavior and helps impaired drivers get home safely

Rally is a platform that allows for pop-up mass transit in high-occupancy vehicles

Spatial provides a dynamic, human-driven layer of social intelligence for maps and navigation

Voyhoy is a multimodal transportation booking platform in Latin America and Europe

Techstars Mobility is a mentorship-driven accelerator program launched in 2015 to focus on next-generation mobility solutions. This year, stakeholders reviewed nearly 500 applications from 52 countries across six continents – a 27 percent increase over 2015. Top themes from applicants include ride-sharing services and technologies, improving the car-ownership experience, and safety and autonomous-driving technologies.

Increasingly, applicants focused on personalizing electric vehicles using software or app development methods. Others concentrate on personal mobility for new eras of car owners including millennials, a generation that places a premium on standing out as opposed to fitting in. This encourages businesses to offer tools for greater self-reliance and purposefulness.

Techstars Mobility, driven by Detroit starts June 13 and culminates Sept. 8 with demo day at Detroit Opera House. Last year, more than 1,000 individuals from 50 different automotive organizations attended the inaugural Techstars Mobility demo day.Building on a successful 2015 classThe 2015 graduating class has raised $5 million in funding to date. Among them is SPLT, which developed a ride-sharing app to promote customized carpooling, which DTE Energy and other companies are adopting. At the end of the 2015 program, SPLT chief executive and founder Anya Babbitt announced her company would move from New York City to Detroit’s Ford Field.

Meanwhile, the global Techstars program has graduated 745 companies since launching in 2007. Those startups have raised $2.2 billion.

In addition to Ford, the Techstars Mobility consortium includes several global corporations also focused on next-generation mobility solutions. Magna International, Verizon, Dana, Honda, McDonald’s, Munich Re and Michelin have all contributed funding and mentorship.Expanding support for startup communityFord is also committed to fostering the startup community through partnerships and donations.

Ford has acquired Detroit-based Livio, a software company working to deliver new in-car connectivity solutions. The automaker also donated a Transit Connect van to 2015 Techstars graduate Cosmos – now renamed Lunar.

“Startups are unburdened by the past and think with a cleaner sheet of paper,” said Bill Coughlin, president and CEO, Ford Global Technologies. “Great, storied companies can benefit from the exciting solutions scrappy startups offer. At the same time, Ford is interested in fostering and engaging this community so that automotive innovations can continue to grow and prosper.”